DHS memo confirms two federal shooters, probes errant shot in Alex Pretti killing
20h
TC
5
A DHS memo to Congress confirms two federal officers — one Border Patrol agent and one Customs and Border Protection officer — each fired Glock pistols during the Nicollet Avenue killing of 37‑year‑old ICU nurse Alex Pretti, and DHS says it is leading the probe with Homeland Security Investigations and the FBI while CBP conducts an internal review; at least four Border Patrol officers on scene were wearing body cameras and involved agents have been placed on administrative leave. Plaintiffs’ newly filed declaration and bystander video and testimony allege agents used pepper spray and force on observers and saw no gun in Pretti’s hands, investigators are examining whether an agent accidentally discharged Pretti’s Sig Sauer P320 after disarming him, a court has ordered evidence preserved amid initial state‑federal access disputes, President Trump has called for an “honest investigation,” and DOJ has not opened a separate civil‑rights probe.
Public Safety
Legal
Immigration & Federal Enforcement
Eight weeks of Operation Metro Surge reshape Twin Cities
5d
TC
2
Eight weeks of Operation Metro Surge have reshaped the Twin Cities with an intensified law‑enforcement presence and sustained enforcement actions across the region. Reporting during that period also surfaced a 911 call from a private guard at a Minnesota immigration detention facility in which staff described an ICE detainee who had just attempted suicide and then “kept going” before being killed, providing time‑stamped evidence that could be central to wrongful‑death or civil‑rights inquiries.
Public Safety
Legal
Local Government
911 audio details ICE detainee death in Minnesota facility
5d
Developing
TC
1
Newly released 911 audio captures a private security guard at a Minnesota immigration detention facility reporting that an ICE detainee had just attempted suicide and then "kept going" before being killed in custody, adding hard detail to what was previously just a vague federal death notice. The call describes staff intervening when the man tried to harm himself, then a confrontation that ended with the detainee down and unresponsive, while the guard pleads for medical help. This happened inside Minnesota’s contracted immigration detention system at the same time Operation Metro Surge has flooded the Twin Cities with federal agents and driven a spike in habeas petitions and civil‑rights challenges over federal conduct. The recording will be Exhibit A in whatever comes next — a state or federal investigation, a wrongful‑death suit, or both — because it’s a contemporaneous account that can be checked against later ICE reports, autopsy findings and any surveillance or body‑camera footage. For metro residents already watching federal officers shoot people on Minneapolis streets, it’s another reminder that the human toll of this surge doesn’t stop at the jail door.
Public Safety
Legal
Immigration & Federal Enforcement